David Boland, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 2021
DocketASBCA No. 61923, 61924, 61925
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
David Boland, Inc., (asbca 2021).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS Appeals of - ) ) David Boland, Inc. ) ASBCA Nos. 61923, 61924, 61925 ) Under Contract No. W9128A-12-C-0009 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Christopher P. Sobba, Esq. Denis L. Durkin, Esq. James Sobba, LLC Kansas City, MO

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Nathan Kanale Sadowski, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorney U.S. Army Engineer District, Honolulu

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE SWEET

These appeals involve three pass-through claims on behalf of a subcontractor related to a contract for the construction of infrastructure. In ASBCA No. 61923, appellant David Boland, Inc. (Boland) alleges that the condition encountered of an existing telecommunications line being concrete-encased differed materially from either the condition indicated in the contract documents, or the known or usual conditions. In ASBCA No. 61924, Boland alleges that the government constructively changed the contract when it directed Boland to install a temporary power pole farther away from a non-directional beacon (NDB) than required by the contract. In ASBCA No. 61925, Boland alleges that the government constructively changed the contract when it directed Boland to use structural backfill – instead of the native materials that the specifications allegedly required – for a box culvert.

Pursuant to Board Rule 11, the parties have elected to waive a hearing and submit these appeals upon the record. After reviewing the parties’ filings, we conclude that Boland has failed to meet its burden of proving that there was a differing site condition or a constructive change. Therefore, we deny these appeals. FINDINGS OF FACT

I. General Facts

1. On June 29, 2012, the United States Army Corps of Engineers (government) awarded Contract No. W9128A-12-C-0009 (0009 Contract) to Boland, which required Boland to construct infrastructure for the Combat Aviation Brigade at Wheeler Army Air Field (WAAF) in Hawaii in exchange for $54,772,000 (R4, tab A-2 at 26-27).

2. The 0009 Contract included a FAR 52.243-4(d), CHANGES (JUN 2007) clause, which required the government to provide an equitable adjustment for any changes to the 0009 Contract (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 162).1

3. Boland subcontracted with Kingston Environmental Services d/b/a Sealaska Civil (Kingston) to perform civil and earth work activities (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-11 at 9,198, 9210).

II. Facts Specific to ASBCA No. 61923 (Telecommunications Line)

4. As part of the project, Boland had to install an underground box culvert (app. second supp. R4, tab 7 at 122).

5. The general notes to the drawings stated that “unless relocation is called for on the plans, existing utilities shall remain in-service and in place” (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 3,891 at General Note 8).

6. Drawing EI-113 of the 0009 Contract showed an existing telecommunications line (Line) crossing the location where the 0009 Contract required Boland to construct the box culvert, and did not call for relocation of the Line (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 3,534, tab A-5 at 8,356-57).

7. Drawing EI-113 did not positively indicate that the Line was exposed, and thus free of concrete-encasement (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 3,534).

8. As the government’s quality assurance representative and project engineer declare, a reasonable contractor would not assume that buried telecommunications lines would be exposed, or lack concrete-encasement (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-4 ¶ 20, tab A-5 ¶ 26).

1 All citations to “gov’t supp. R4” are to the government’s revised supplemental R4 filing.

2 9. On the contrary, a reasonable contractor would have concluded that the Line was concrete-encased for two reasons. First, drawing EI-113 did not represent the Line with a dashed line (- - - -), which the drawings defined as “CONDUIT & WIRING EXPOSED.” Rather, drawing EI-113 represented the Line with alternating long and short dashes (— – —), which the drawings defined as an “UNDERGROUND DUCTLINE.” (Gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 3,520, 3,534) The 0009 Contract § 26 56 20.00 10, ¶ 3.6.3 (¶ 3.6.3) indicated that “[e]ach single duct shall be completely encased in concrete” (id. at 1,540; see also id. at 3,556, 3,567, 3,775 (providing drawings of ducts showing concrete-encasement)). Second, a call-out from the Line in drawing EI-113 identified the Line as “D1,” (id. at 3,534), which the drawings showed was a concrete-encased line (id. at 3,557).

10. When Kingston encountered the Line while excavating for the box culvert, it found that the Line was concrete-encased (gov’t supp. R4, tab B-5 at 3,287).

11. Boland claims that the drawings did not show that the Line was concrete-encased, and that maintaining a concrete-encased line in-service and in place increased Kingston’s costs by $26,070 (compl. ¶¶ 12, 19).

III. Facts Specific to ASBCA No. 61924 (Temporary Power Pole)

12. The drawings permitted the construction of structures of up to 7.62 meters (25 feet) in height between 61 meters (200 feet) and 122 meters (400 feet) in distance from the NDB (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 3,904-05, 3,907-08).2

13. In May or June 2013, the government met with WAAF Operations personnel, who stated that Boland could not locate a 25 foot proposed temporary power pole (Pole) within 304.8 meters (1,000 feet) of the NDB (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-5 at 8,354 ¶ 11).

14. On June 19, 2013, Boland emailed the government’s project engineer, stating that Boland read the drawings to allow the 25 foot pole between 61 meters (200 feet) and 122 meters (400 feet) from the NDB (gov’t supp. R4, tab C-8 at 104-05). In response, the project engineer “did not . . . provide any official direction in regards to the location of temporary power poles” (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-5 at 8,354 ¶ 14). Rather, the project engineer responded to Boland by agreeing that, “[y]es, per contract, radii from 61M to 122 M from center of the NDB should not have anything over 25-ft (7.62M).” While the project engineer continued, “[h]aving said that, I still need to confirm where AE obtained this requirement and compare [it] against the restriction of

2 The drawings show metric measurements. We take judicial notice of the conversion from metric to imperial measurements.

3 1,000-ft recently identified by Airfield Ops,” there were no further discussion between Boland and the government regarding the Pole. (Gov’t supp. R4, tab C-8 at 104)3

15. Boland claims that Kingston incurred $2,212 in extra costs because it had to abandon a pole pad it had constructed for the Pole within 400 feet of the NDP and construct a new pole pad in order to comply with the purported direction not to build the Pole within 1,000 feet of the NDB (compl. ¶¶ 21-23, 28). However, Boland ultimately constructed the Pole within 1,000 feet of the NDB (gov’t supp. R4, tab A-7 at 8,360, Interrogatory Response 6).

IV. Facts Specific to ASBCA No. 61925 (Box Culvert Backfill)

16. Both the box culvert and other aspects of the project required backfill (app. second supp. R4, tab 7 at 122).

17. Specification § 31 00 00, subsection 1.4.11 (subsection 1.4.11) gave Boland, at most, some discretion as to the type of backfill to use, stating that “[i]nitial backfill consists of select granular material or satisfactory materials free from rocks 25 mm or larger in any dimension or free from rocks of such size as recommended by the pipe manufacturer, whichever is smaller.” Subsection 1.4.11 did not mention box culvert backfill specifically, or require Boland to use native materials for box culvert backfill in particular. (Gov’t supp. R4, tab A-2 at 1,620)

18.

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